Market Research using Facebook Ads

Facebook: Free Market Research

No, not scraping my friends. There is a legitimate way to get some great market information from Facebook and I’m going to show you how. It all starts with the nifty invention of Facebook Ads, which was designed to help businesses target their audience based on demographics and other factors. It attracted Facebook spammers, local businesses and a few clever marketing firms, but as I’ve found there are many uses to this feature.

Here’s an example of research results you can extract from Facebook Ads:

For the Infographic above, here is the example scenario:

I own an online football shop, based in Singapore

I stock only Nike and Adidas football boots

I want to create an ad to sell football boots

What I wanted to answer: Which brand of boots would be more likely to return my investment on advertising online in Singapore?

Create a sample advert by simply typing in any URL and continue into the next page. There is no fee required to access the following Facebook statistics.

You should see a targeting window at this point which will display search criteria (location, demographics, likes & interests), you can also select advanced targeting options which will give you more options to narrow your search

It’s as easy as typing in ex. “United Kingdom” and you will notice an estimated reach statistic according to what you’ve selected.

The results for specific search criteria such as likes & interests: “Nike” are entirely dependent on how many people have selected “Nike” as an interest.

The main problem with the ad creation page is limitation. For the next few examples I’m looking to find everything relative to Nike, Nike Football, Nike Football Singapore and Nike Singapore. Using the search box in my personal Facebook profile I can start my research.

Problems with Search that can prevent accurate results

1. When comparing different likes & interests there is currently no way to remove duplicates. Ex. One person (or profile) can be fan of both “Nike” and “Nike football”. You might be tempted to scrape Facebook, and sort the data in a spreadsheet. I don’t suggest it, and it might be worth taking the time to read about lawsuits concerning this matter.

2. Sometimes you will find groups in the Likes & Interests search and it won’t actually be a valid group in Facebook. Here was my experience searching for “Adidas football Asia”

3. The search can seize and display previous results. This is a software error, if you notice that the same search suggestions keep appearing you need to refresh the page and start over.

4. The search will sometimes display multiple groups for the same like & interest:

For reference purposes: to get my results I used the following search criteria:

Location: Singapore Age: Any to Any Gender: All Interested in: All (women, men)

Conclusion

Using this method as your only source for your market validation would be a grave mistake, instead use it as an add on to your other primary and secondary sources. When it comes to finding legitimate information through Facebook, this is by far the easiest method, provided that your results aren’t just a bunch of fake profiles. Yes, fake profiles. There’s alot of them and of course these people will randomly join groups to maintain their status as a real person.

So what’s the answer? Make sure you use a sample size of at least 10,000, 100,000 is even better.

On a personal note, try not to use this tool with an evil marketing grin. Facebook has been inundated with redundant, devious and deceptive advertising that has put even the most novice of users out of the “CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR FREE CREDIT SCORE” game.